Foreign languages faculty


Theoretical views on lexemes, lexicology and lexicography



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1.1. Theoretical views on lexemes, lexicology and lexicography

The first lexicographic documents are lists of Sumerian words (up to 1400) with their Akkadian equivalents, written in cuneiform script on clay tablets about 4,700 years ago. The practice compiling such word lists was continued throughout Antiquity and the Middle Ages; thus, the oldest document in German, the Abrogans (written around 765), is an inventory of some Latin words with explanations in German. Usually, these ‘glossaries’ did not aim at a full account of the lexicon; they simply brought together a number of words which, for one reason or another, were felt to be ‘difficult,’ and explained them either by a more familiar word in the same language or by a translation. Words were ordered alphabetically, by theme, or not at all. But there are also more systematic attempts, such as the Catholicon, a mixture of encyclopedia and dictionary which, compiled around 1250, was the first printed lexical work in Europe (Mainz 1460). In the sixteenth century, two developments led to major changes. The first of these was the invention of printing by Gutenberg. By 1500, virtually all classical authors were available in print, thus offering a solid basis for systematic lexical accounts of Latin and Greek, such as Calepinus’ Dictionarium (1502), soon to be followed by two early masterpieces: Robert Etienne’s Dictionarium seu Latinae Linguae Thesaurus (Paris 1531) and Henri Etienne’s Thesaurus Graecae Linguae (Paris 1572). The second major development was the slow but steady rise of national languages. Since early Italian, French, English, or German were hardly codified, a major aim of the first dictionaries in these languages was to give them clear norms. In some countries, national Academies were founded to this end. The outcome were dictionaries with a strongly normative, often puristic, stance, such as the Vocabulario degli Academici della Crusca (Venice 1612), the Dictionnaire de l’AcadeUmie Francnaise (Paris 1694) and the Diccionario de autoridades publicado por la Real Academia Espanola (1726–1739). The bulk of lexicographic work, however, was always done by enterprising publishers and engaged 8766 Lexicology and Lexicography individuals, such as Dr Samuel Johnson. Helped by six assistants, he produced A Dictionary of the English Language (London 1755), the first scholarly description of the English vocabulary, in less than eight years. It surpassed all its predecessors, including Bailey’s Dictionarium Britannicum from 1736, which Johnson took as his point of departure, by the systematic use of quotations, taken from the best writers, and by his brilliant, sometimes somewhat extravagant, definitions (not everybody would dare to characterize patriotism as ‘the last refuge of a scoundrel’). Less known, much less witty, but broader in coverage is the first comprehensive dictionary of German, Johann Christoph Adelungs Versuch eines ŠollstaXndigen grammatisch-kritischen WoXrterbuchs der hochdeutschen Mundart (Leipzig 1774–86). The rise of historical-comparative linguistics in the early nineteenth century led to an enormous increase in grammatical and lexical knowledge. The first dictionary which tried to cover this knowledge was the Deutsches WoXrterbuch by Jacob Grimm and (to a much lesser extent) his brother Wilhelm Grimm. Its first fascicle appeared in 1852, after about ten years of preparatory work, in which the Grimms were helped by about 100 scholars providing excerpts (‘covering my desk like snowflakes,’ Jacob Grimm). At that time, it was already clear that the original plan of 6–7 volumes, to be finished within 10–12 years, was unrealistic. The Grimms finished only letters A–(most of ) F, and the final folio volume (of altogether 32) appeared in 1960. This long duration, as well as the varying talents and preferences of the contributors, has led to many inconsistencies; some entries got out of balance (no less than 60 pages are devoted to the single word Geist); still, it is an incommensurable source of lexical information. The work of the Grimms inspired a number of similar ventures, such as Emile Littre!’s masterly Dictionnaire de la langue francnaise (1863–1873), which is much shorter, but also much more consistent: Matthias de Vries and his numerous successors’ voluminous Woordenboek der Nederlandsche Taal (1864–1998), and finally A New English Dictionary on a Historical Basis (1884–1928), generally referred to as the ‘Oxford English Dictionary’ (OED). It was initiated in 1857 by the philologist and churchman Richard Trench; in 1860, members of the Philological Society started to collect excerpts; in 1879, the Clarendon Press appointed James Murray as the Principal Editor. The first fascicle appeared in 1882, and the whole work was completed in 1928, 13 years after Murray’s death. More than 200 scholars were involved in its production, more than 2,000 people are known to have contributed excerpts. The OED is not without flaws, even in its revised edition, which appeared in 1989 in print and in 1992 on CD-ROM; but among all attempts to describe the lexicon of a language, it comes closest to falsify what Dr Johnson stated in the preface to his own dictionary: ‘Every other author may aspire to praise; the lexicographer can only hope to escape reproach.’ (For a comprehensive survey of lexicographic work across languages, see Hausmann et al. 1991, pp. 1679–2710, 2949–3119). 5. The Use of Computers We tend to think of dictionaries as the normal, if not the only possible way to compile and to present lexical information. But the dawn of the computer has provided us with a very different and in many ways more efficient tool. Computers can be used in at least three ways in lexicography. It is possible to transfer an existing dictionary to a computer, as has often been done over the last 20 years. Such a transfer offers several advantages: search is faster and more exhaustive; it is easier to revise and update the dictionary; and it is possible to add information not available in book format, for example, spoken sound instead of phonetic transcriptions. But essentially, the format of the printed book is maintained. Next, computers are a powerful tool in the production of a new dictionary. Rather than having a number of people read through books and newspapers and make excerpts of all occurrences which look interesting, it is now possible to compile huge text corpora that cover all varieties of a language, to scan these texts for all occurrences of words or word combinations, to sort these occurrences by various criteria, to link them to other occurrences, to add as much context as needed, etc. (see Corpus Linguistics). The OED, is based on about 5 million excerpts, mostly handwritten on paper slips. A computer can easily process corpora of several hundred million words, i.e., several hundred million occurrences; new sources can rapidly be added. This allows a much broader and much more representative coverage of a lexicon than ever. But electronic corpora only provide the raw material; it still awaits lexical analysis. This analysis can be facilitated by computer tools, also; but no computer can tell us what a word means in a particular context. But even if only one minute is devoted to each occurrence in a one-hundred million corpus, it would take 10 lexicographers 100 years to go through it. This means that printed dictionaries can never reflect the wealth of information accessible in large corpora, since they presuppose that the lexicographer has finished the analysis. Therefore, the only way to make full use of large corpora is by means of lexical retrieval systems. They consist of (a) a computer-accessible and expandable corpus, (b) a set of tools, which allow, for example, not only the search for certain items but also statistical analysis or the determination of the first occurrence, and (c) a selective but steadily proceeding lexical analysis of the corpus. Thus, it is possible to add spoken forms in various dialects, information about word classes, or 8767 Lexicology and Lexicography the semantic analysis of some subset of lexical units, say all prepositions or all morphologically simple verbs. Similarly, translation equivalents can be added. Unlike printed dictionaries, such a lexical retrieval system will never come to an end, it is steady work-inprogress to which many can contribute and which will give us a deeper and broader understanding of the lexicon than any other method. See also:; Corpus Linguistics; Lexical Access, Cognitive Psychology of; Lexical Processes (Word Knowledge): Psychological and Neural Aspects; Lexical Semantics

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